Month: March 2012

I learned the term Inner-platform effect the other day and it perfectly describes an API that I have touched upon.

First of all, what is the Inner-platform effect? It basically means that in attempt to make an application as flexible as possible it is implemented so that it creates a new platform that abstracts the original platform. I immediately associated to the API described below.

Let’s see if you can spot the Inner-platform effect in this URL, heavily anonymized but if you have been exposed to it you will probably recognize it immediately.

There are actually three examples of the Inner-platform effect in the above URL. The first is example is the “service” parameter. Instead of having separate URLs for separate services, the service name is a parameter. This means that the server platform first figures out what to about the /execute/clientSystemConnector path component of the URL, then the Inner Platform need to figure out how to handle the different possible values of the service parameter. (Anyone thinking about a giant “switch” statement?) To avoid the Inner-platform effect, each service should have its own path in the URL.

The second example is blatantly obvious: having key and value parameters that specifies the names and values of the actual parameters. The impact of this “feature” is that the platform provides a list of keys and a list of values to the inner platform, which must extract the actual parameters for use in the application. Without the Inner-platform effect the application could have received the parameters directly from the original platform.

It is probably not so easy to spot the third example, but it concerns authentication. Authentication (if it could be called that) for the services in this API is based on using different paths for different clients. So the above URL is used by the “clientSystem”. If “anotherClientSystem” need to execute the same service, the URL would be: